Saturday, September 3, 2016

After a Lifetime with the Poor, Mother Teresa Finally to be Made a Saint by Pope Francis

Next
week, on the 19th anniversary of her death, the Vatican will declare
Mother Teresa to be Saint Teresa of Kolkata in a historic event to be
presided by Pope Francis.

One of the most iconic figures of the 20th century, Mother Teresa
of Calcutta, is set to become a Catholic saint on Sunday in an open-air
Mass led by Pope Francis. Father Brian Kolodiejchuk, the Canadian priest
who promoted her sainthood cause, said on Thursday in Vatican that
hundreds of thousands of faithful are expected to attend the
canonisation service to be led by Pope Francis in front of St. Peter’s
basilica.

According to Father Kolodiejchuk, her canonisation is one of the
highlights of Francis’ Jubilee of Mercy. Affectionately called the “saint of the gutters”
during her lifetime, Mother Teresa of Calcutta will be made an official
saint of the Roman Catholic Church on Sunday, just 19 years after her
death.

“The Church defines saints as those believed to have been holy
enough during their lives to now be in Heaven and able to intercede with
God to perform miracles. She has been credited with two miracles, both
involving the healing of sick people," he said.

Father Kolodiejchuk said that Mother Teresa was one of the most
influential women in the Church’s 2,000-year history, acclaimed for her
work amongst the worlds poorest of the poor in the slums of the Indian
city now called Kolkata. He said critics view her differently, arguing
she did little to alleviate the pain of the terminally ill and nothing
to stamp out the root causes of poverty.

The priest recalled that in 1991, the British medical journal the
Lancet visited a home she ran in Kolkata for the dying and said
untrained carers failed to recognise when some patients could have been
cured. Kolodiejchuk said her detractors missed the point of her mission,
arguing that she had created a place to comfort people in their final
days rather than establish hospitals.

“We don’t have to prove that saints were perfect, because no one is perfect.”
He said that several events are planned in the run up to the ceremony,
including a prayer vigil on Friday, an audience in St Peter’s Square
with Francis on Saturday morning. Kolodiejchuk said it would be followed
in the evening by a veneration of Teresa’s relics in a Roman basilica
outside of the Vatican.

“As the canonisation falls on the eve of Teresa’s feast day,
which marks the anniversary of her death on September 5, 1997, there are
expected to be more celebrations and religious services on Monday and
later on in the week. He said that on September 7-8, pilgrims would be
allowed to visit the room Teresa used on visits to Rome, in the convent
of the Church of San Gregorio Magno near the Colosseum, where her
Missionaries of Charity have a local branch."

Father Kolodiejchuk said that the Indian Foreign Minister, Sushma
Swaraj and other dignitaries from Teresa’s adopted nation are scheduled
to attend the Mass.

Mother Teresa was born Agnese Gonxha Bojaxhiu of Albanian parents
in 1910 in what was then part of the Ottoman Empire and is now
Macedonia. She became a nun at 16 and moved to India in 1929, creating
her mission in 1950 and gained worldwide recognition for her work,
including a Nobel Peace Prize in 1979.

Private letters published after her death in 1997 also revealed
that for the last 50 years of her life she despaired over having lost a
personal connection with Jesus, while she continued steadfastly to serve
his cause. All her life, she worked to serve poorer sections of Indian
society.

The late Pope John Paul II reportedly bent Vatican rules to allow
the procedure to establish her case for sainthood to be launched two
years after her death instead of the usual five, and she was beatified
in 2003.